On the PBS NewsHour Friday night, the show's liberal commentator, Mark Shields suggested the Republicans have no one to challenge Barack Obama: “The reality of the CPAC meeting is that there's 11,000 people there at the hotel registered for this conference. They're a constituency in search of a candidate. There is — I mean, usually, it is a candidate looking for a constituency. They want to beat Barack Obama, but they don't have anybody.” In 2007, liberal commentators treated the Democratic field like an embarrassment of riches. They couldn't even be truly embarrassed by Dennis Kucinich. But now the Republicans have “nobody.” Naturally, PBS's allegedly conservative commentator David Brooks agreed: “I personally think there are really very few plausible candidates.” He joked that Donald Trump would be the GOP nominee, then suggested Sen. John Thune was promising…because he was “an extremely good-looking guy.” He said John McCain likes to say if he had Thune's face, he'd be president. Shields also slammed CPAC for failing to discuss Egypt all day: SHIELDS: What impressed me the most of all there was what they did not discuss. As the world was dominated and riveted on what was going on in Egypt, they didn't even address it in their speeches. JIM LEHRER : Well, why do you think that is? MARK SHIELDS: Well, I think it is a lack of self-confidence, surefootedness. They didn't know what they wanted to say. They weren't sure. The only one who was really critical that I saw was Rick Santorum, the former senator from Pennsylvania, who basically took the line that has been developed by both Sean Hannity and Glenn Beck. And that was that the — Barack Obama, by not supporting Hosni Mubarak in his hour of need, was turning his back on a great ally. And that — that became the position. But there was nobody there really celebrating the moment of freedom and taking that, picking up that banner. And that — that — I think that does belie a lack of confidence, surefootedness, on a terribly important issue. Brooks did not reply with the obvious rejoinder that Team Obama hasn't exactly shown “confidence” or “surefootedness” on Egypt, when their top intelligence officials wrongly proclaimed on Thursday that Mubarak had stepped down based on cable news channels (CIA director Leon Panetta) or wrongly proclaimed the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt is secular (James Clapper, director of national intelligence). Brooks picked up on Glenn Beck, saying his fears about Muslim caliphates in Egypt are “delusional” and “wacky” and siding with his old Weekly Standard colleague William Kristol. This allowed Shields to claim that the revolution in Egypt was secular and yet a triumph for the public-relations face of Islam: SHIELDS : Joyful, ecstatic. It's a — it's bottom-up. This wasn't orchestrated from the top, no artillery, no carpet bombing, no IEDs, unlike Iraq, no — no body counts, just a remarkable, remarkable, historic achievement. And I think that it puts a brand-new face for those outside of the Middle East on Islam. I mean, this is — al-Qaida hates what happened, is happening right now in Egypt. I mean, this is an — this is an achievement of such signal proportion, you can't — look, this is a, what, 90 percent Islamic nation. And you look at Muslim faith, and you look at that right now, and you say, wait a minute, how different can they be? They crave democracy. They — self-determination. LEHRER: It was a secular — it was a secular… SHIELDS: Secular, better for their future. I mean, just a remarkable, remarkable moment, and encouraging. Liberals claim that conservatives are too harsh on Islam, but they still find the word “secular” always “encouraging.” Shields also claimed that the House Republicans have clearly demonstrated their leaders are not as accomplished as Speaker Nancy Pelosi in her debut: I think, Jim, what we see in — there is a real problem for the Republicans in the House leadership, because any new leadership, when they take over, there is a question of, they're developing confidence in themselves, in each other, as a cohesive group. And it just contrasts to when Nancy Pelosi took over the House, and with a Republican president, in 2006. In the first 100 hours or so, they passed — they passed the — a student loan bill. They passed an increase in the minimum wage. They passed veteran benefits. I mean, and Republicans are kind of feeling their way along. And they are stumbling a little bit. I mean, John — there is a question of confidence with John Boehner, how much he can have in his leadership, when — when they can't count and they lose two floor votes this week. And the freshman that David talked about, some 87 strong, are — they have to be socialized. They have to be made part of a cohesive unit. And they're not — they're not there yet. And they do want to cut. They want to cut bigger. “They have to be socialized.” Like they're incontinent puppies. This is how PBS types think about the people who now must be trained to keep funding PBS. House leaders didn't have a good week in counting votes. But the idea that Accomplishment arrived with Pelosi is a rich line. Just start with the idea that Pelosi came in to stop the surge in Iraq. Oops. Finally, David Brooks suggested that CPAC (and the larger Republican Party)
Continue reading …By overcoming their fears and defying the man whose regime had terrorised them for 30 years, Cairo’s protesters not only drove out Hosni Mubarak, they have changed the Arab world There is a tide in the affairs of men which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune, says Brutus in Shakespeare’s Julius Caesar as he urges his comrades to seize the moment to overthrow the ruler they see as a tyrant. It has taken decades for the storm surge to break over Egypt, but when it finally did the forces of change proved irresistible, sweeping away Hosni Mubarak in just 18 days of popular and peaceful street protests. The most remarkable feature of all is that nobody saw it coming. For all its resources, the United States and its western allies were taken completely by surprise by the brutally swift events which are now reshaping the geo-strategic map of the Middle East. Regime change, the Arab street has shown, need not be given such a bad name after all. Some have called this moment the Arab world’s 1989, when the Iron Curtain fell in eastern Europe – but that was presaged by the years of reform in the Soviet Union under Gorbachev. In truth, there are no real precedents. A first draft of why it happened must begin in a rural town in Tunisia on the shores of the Mediterranean where Mohamed Bouazizi was the unlikeliest catalyst of the extraordinary realignment in the region. Known locally as Basboosa, Mohamed, aged 26, was a street fruit vendor in Sidi Bouzid, where unemployment is conservatively estimated at 30%. He earned around £87 a month, the money going to support his six siblings, including one sister in university. He was regularly stopped by police, who expected him to pay them bribes to allow him to sell his wares from a wheelbarrow. On the morning of 17 December last year he had spent the equivalent of £125 on merchandise when it was seized. What made the loss harder to take was the humiliation. A 45-year-old female officer slapped him across the face, spat at him, scattered his fruit on the ground and confiscated his electronic scales. Two of her colleagues joined in, beating him. As a coup de grace , the woman insulted Mohamed’s dead father, a labourer who died of a heart attack when his eldest son was just three years old. Mohamed finally snapped. For decades millions of young men like him right across the North African coastal plain have watched television images beamed from the other side of the Mediterranean from a European continent of prosperity, freedom and opportunity. They have watched the cronies of their own regimes growing older and, in their decadence, more arrogant and corrupt. They have watched hope for a better future leaking away. Seeking justice, Mohamed went to the local governor’s office to complain about his treatment. He issued a warning when told that the governor was unavailable: “If you don’t see me, I’ll burn myself.” At 11.30am, less than an hour after he had been robbed and humiliated by the state’s forces, he doused himself in petrol in front of the governor’s office and set himself alight. “What kind of repression do you imagine it takes for a young man to do this?” said his sister Samia when her brother finally died of horrific injuries on 4 January. “A man who has to feed his family by buying goods on credit when they fine him … and take his goods. In Sidi Bouzid, those with no connections and no money for bribes are humiliated and insulted and not allowed to live.” The young man’s desperate action was a rallying call long awaited in his country and its neighbours. Mohamed Bouazizi’s death became the spark which lit the bonfire on which the corrupt regime of Tunisia’s President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali would also perish. And, like a bushfire out of control, there was soon fears that the “contagion” would spread. In an eerie coincidence with subsequent events in Egypt, it took 18 days for Mohamed to die, during which time Ben Ali was sufficiently shaken by the growing voices of anger and protest that he visited the dying young man in hospital. At his funeral 5,000 mourners chanted: “Farewell, Mohamed, we will avenge you. We weep for you today. We will make those who caused your death weep.” He was buried at Garaat Bennour cemetery, 10 miles from Sidi Bouzid. By then there was no turning back for the old guard as riots in Sidi Bouzid spread to the capital, Tunis. It seemed miraculous to Tunisians how quickly the iron fist of Ben Ali, president for 24 years, was loosened. The internet played a vital role, subverting the state-controlled communications channels by allowing ordinary citizens to bypass them and organise democratically. “Game Over!” taunted the placards and cheers of the jubilant crowds in a deliberate reference to the age of online computer gaming – a world beyond the reach of ageing tyrants, where the sans culottes of the Arab world come together in cyberspace. For decades Tunisia had been characterised by the west as a “model” Arab nation, but the WikiLeaks saga, months earlier, revealed the ugly truth of what its key sponsor, the United States, really thought of this “mafia state”, run as a virtual private enterprise by Ben Ali and his hated, avaricious wife Leila Trabelsi, who plundered 1.5 tonnes of gold from the central bank when they fled to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia. Ben Ali’s removal from power suddenly seemed to be creating a potential domino-effect around the region. First he tried to quell the protests by addressing the nation on state television and promising reforms. But when this failed to stem the tide of opposition, and with confidence among the armed forces ebbing from him, he chose to run. An international arrest warrant has been issued by Tunisia and his assets in Swiss banks have been frozen. While opposition figures, including a leading internet activist, have joined an interim government in preparation for elections within two months, the situation in Tunisia remains highly fluid and volatile, with most ordinary citizens unhappy that so many leading lights of the old regime remain in power. The results of Mohamed Bouazizi’s self-immolation swiftly prompted protests across the region. Inspired by Tunisia’s Jasmine Revolution, large protests began in Algeria, Yemen, Jordan and Egypt, with lesser incidents in Mauritania, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, Oman, Syria, Iraq, Lebanon, Libya and Morocco. Many were characterised by a playful, party atmosphere. In Amman, the Jordanian security forces handed out soft drinks to protesters, who laughed as they chanted “Mubarak you are next!” The Jordanians could not have known they were right. But to fully comprehend the swirling fury of the Egyptian street one must look back nine months. It was near midnight on Sunday 6 June when two Egyptian police officers walked into the Space Net internet cafe on Boubaset Street, a short stroll from Alexandria’s crumbling corniche, and demanded to speak to Khaled Said. According to his mother and sister, Said, 28, was devoted to his pet cats and enjoyed pacing the seafront, flying kites on his own. His room was a jumble of wires and old car batteries, part of a homemade music system Said used to practise rapping; the thumping bass from behind his door could often be heard well into the early hours. “He was ordinary, like any one of us,” remembers his sister, Zahraa. “He never seemed interested in politics at all.” That night Khaled Said was beaten to death by the two officers who came looking for him. They smashed his head against a marble ledge in the lobby of the building next door before throwing his body into the back of a van, driving around, then dumping it by the roadside. It later emerged that Said had taped a secret video depicting what appeared to be corrupt local security chiefs dividing up the spoils of a drugs bust. His family also discovered self-penned anti-government songs stored on his computer. Three months ago, in the run-up to Egypt’s blatantly rigged parliamentary elections, Zahraa told the Observer that the suffering of her brother and others like him could end up shaking the country to its very foundations: “Change will not come from this regime’s version of democracy, it will come in the shape of a tidal wave from below. Maybe the torture and murders carried out by our policemen will set that tidal wave in motion.” Her words were prescient. Khaled Said was not the first Egyptian killed at the hands of Mubarak’s police force, nor would he be the last. In Said’s Sidi Gabr neighbourhood alone, dozens of police torture cases have been logged by local activists over the past eight months, some of them fatal. But the brazen manner of this particular murder – on a public street and not behind the blacked-out windows of the Sidi Gabr police headquarters – and the fact that the victim was middle-class, with relatives able to resist pressure from the security services to keep quiet, ensured that the name of Khaled Said quickly become synonymous with the staggering brutality and corruption of Mubarak’s vast security apparatus, a brutality and corruption to which almost all Egyptians, to a lesser degree, were exposed on a daily basis. “That was the turning point,” claims Heba Morayef, the Human Rights Watch advocate in Egypt. “Prior to that, demonstrations in favour of political reform struck many ordinary Egyptians as somewhat abstract, even if they had vague sympathy with the sentiments being expressed. “Police cruelty, however, was something that touched people personally and it inspired a whole new, cross-class section of society to adopt a more combative stance towards the state.” After much dithering and buck-passing by the authorities, the two officers responsible (though not their seniors) were put on trial and mass protests in major cities began. The demonstrations were never more than a few thousand strong, and often smaller – not insignificant in a country where a 30-year-old emergency law effectively criminalises any sort of public expression of dissent, but not enough to panic Mubarak’s entrenched political elite. Online, however, it was a different story. Kolina Khaled Said, a Facebook group meaning “We are all Khaled Said”, quickly gathered hundreds of thousands, of supporters, who swapped information on other examples of inhumane police treatment and helped organise small-scale acts of civil disobedience. Along with a loose network of more explicitly political online activist groups, the anonymous administrators behind Kolina Khaled Said – one of whom turned out to be Google’s regional marketing executive, Wael Ghonim, who attended to the web page from his home 1,500 miles away in Dubai – tried to find creative ways to get round Egypt’s suffocating legal prohibitions on collective action in an effort to make their voices heard on the ground. Sometimes small groups of youths would “spontaneously” gather in city centres and sing the national anthem; on other occasions individuals wearing black would walk to the Nile at an appointed hour across the country and stand separately by the river in silence, an innocent routine that still managed to provoke a violent response from the security services. This vague but energetic new wave of dissent was leaving behind the moribund landscape of formal opposition politics in Egypt, where paper-democrats had long been scrabbling for crumbs of power tossed down by a regime keen to keep up the facade of a pluralist democracy. Now a new alternative avenue of resistance was on the cards and it was led from below, by those who had never known anything other than Mubarak’s autocratic rule. With a demographic time-bomb ticking below the surface – two-thirds of Egypt’s population is below the age of 30, and each year 700,000 new graduates chase 200,000 jobs – conditions were ripe for a social explosion. Into this combustible mix entered Kolina Khaled Said, the creators of which took great pains to cast their movement as not party-political, not backed by shadowy foreign forces, and dedicated primarily to encouraging Egyptians not to be afraid. The ingredients for massive social unrest may have been falling into place, but still in the way stood the firmest obstacle of all: fear. Through a prodigious web of overlapping security agencies ranging from armed riot police to plain-clothes informants to the baltagiyya – casually-employed ex-prisoners and local thugs – Mubarak’s ruling clique had effectively instilled a sense of hopelessness in an overwhelming proportion of the population, whose instincts lay in avoiding the state, not defying it. But there was never any doubt that frustration at the status quo was deep and potent in every geographical and social corner of Egypt. If ever a critical mass of street protests were to develop and individuals thought the state’s gendarmerie was no longer impregnable, it was likely that a full-scale uprising would quickly balloon. But something was needed to break down that initial aversion to open disobedience. Tunisia provided it. Arab neighbours had faced down their own security forces and won; perhaps now Egyptians could do the same. But a change of tactics was essential if the omnipresent state security agencies were to be outwitted; 25 January, the date of a national holiday devoted to celebrating the achievements of the police force, was selected as the “day of rage” to exploit growing public resentment against Mubarak’s security forces which had been fuelled so successfully by Kolina Khaled Said. An umbrella coalition of youth activists formed small cells and spent the preceding weeks meeting in secret, plotting a series of devolved, localised protests designed to put maximum strain on the state security resources. In Cairo, 20 protest sites in densely populated, largely working-class neighbourhoods were selected and publicised. One extra location, in the warren of back streets of the Giza neighbourhood of Bulaq Al-Duqrur, was never broadcast – and took police completely by surprise. “Usually we rally in one place and immediately get kettled in by hundreds or thousands of riot police,” said Ahmed Salah, who was involved in planning for 25 January. “This time we were determined to do something different – be multi-polar, fast-moving, and too mobile for the amin markazi [central security forces], giving us the chance to walk down hundreds of different roads and show normal passers-by that taking to the streets was actually possible.” The plan worked better than they could ever have imagined. Throughout the capital and across the country, pockets of protest sprung up and overpowered the thinly stretched riot police, who had no choice but to let the marches continue. Later, when the different strands rallied in city centres – including Cairo’s symbolic Tahrir Square –the police used guns and tear gas to disperse them. But it was already too late. By destroying the smokescreen of police invincibility, even for only a few hours, the youths had pierced Mubarak’s last line of defence – the fear his subjects felt at the thought of confronting him – and a fatal blow was struck to a 30-year dictatorial regime. Nevertheless, Mubarak would prove to be a mightier force than Tunisia’s Ben Ali. He knew he could rely upon the support of the Americans, who had long granted him premier status in the region not just as guarantor of peace with Israel but also the bulwark against Islamist militancy. And, as a fabled military hero, he was not just the creature of the all-powerful armed forces but for decades their own guarantee of stability and continuity. It was only as the demonstrators refused to desert Tahrir Square or accept Mubarak’s concessions for as long as they fell short of his departure, and as Washington dithered and flip-flopped, that the army began to have its doubts about continuing to back him. Repeatedly over the past two weeks the Obama administration, the State Department, CIA and the Pentagon had been unsettled and confused by the situation in Egypt. Caught unawares at the prospect of the protests actually succeeding, they reacted too slowly, then too quickly and, finally, were rescued by events on the ground. But few should be surprised; American strategy was caught between a rock and a hard place. There was an urgent need to respond to the pro-democracy movement, but at the same time that movement was aimed at unseating one of America’s most trusted Arab allies, a man who had been a friend to five presidents over three decades. At the start the crisis only rippled slowly through Washington. On 26 January, a day after protests began in Egypt, White House spokesman Robert Gibbs called Egypt a “strong ally”. The impression of support for a president whose army soaks up more than one billion dollars of US aid a year was strengthened a day later when vice-president Joe Biden said Mubarak was not a dictator. American policy appeared in total disarray. Obama’s envoy in the crisis, old school diplomat Frank Wisner, travelled to the country. On 5 February he expressed public support for Mubarak staying on, yet such was the confusion in US policymaking now that, mere hours later, both the White House and the State Department disavowed his comments. As the protests refused to die down after Mubarak said that he would resign in September, US policy hardened again. It coalesced around the figure of new vice-president Omar Suleiman. For American – and Israeli – interests, Suleiman seemed ideal. He was known as a strong man and someone who wanted to preserve the strategic status quo, yet also a figure who had made the right noises, in public at least, about making the transition to democracy. He was seen as someone who could avoid the nightmare American scenario of a popular anti-Israeli government taking power in Egypt or, worst of all, an Islamist-influenced one. On 8 February, Biden spoke to Suleiman by phone and stressed the need for an orderly, and swift, transition of power. That convinced many in Washington that it was only a matter of time. Yet the impact of the Egyptian unrest was spiralling out into the rest of American diplomacy. Last Wednesday Obama spoke to Saudi Arabia’s King Abdullah in a reportedly testy exchange in which the ageing Saudi royal argued for Mubarak to not be humiliated. When news of the conversation leaked it created a flurry of speculation that the revolt in Egypt was exposing the weakness of American power. On Thursday CIA chief Leon Panetta told Congress that he imminently expected Mubarak to announce that he was likely to stand down. As Mubarak took to the TV screens that evening, Obama watched the speech on Air Force One as he made his way back from an event in Michigan. Yet Mubarak fell short of the expectations of those in Tahrir Square and of the army generals when he announced he was transferring his remaining powers to Suleiman but remaining as president, if in name only to save his pride. It was a move that stunned many and seemed to threaten a complete unravelling and a blood bath, with the demonstrators noisily hatching plans to march on the presidential palace in the morning, a move which would force the Army, thus far maintaining a politically detached posture, into choosing sides. And so it did, the military’s supreme council shepherding the defeated Mubarak onto a plane to take him to a luxurious internal exile at his Red Sea palace. It was an extraordinary finale to 18 days of rage; the army had staged a coup with the backing of the people. Like a swan looking graceful on the surface while kicking its legs furiously underneath, Obama was able to take to the airwaves and welcome in the changes. “The wheel of history turned at a blinding pace,” Obama said. For once, he was spot on. Egypt Hosni Mubarak Protest Omar Suleiman Barack Obama Middle East Tunisia David Sharrock Jack Shenker Paul Harris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Chris Matthews on Friday said that Hosni Mubarak's exit from Egypt and the jubilation now happening in Tahrir Square took Barack Obama to have happen. As soon as he said it on the 5PM installment of MSNBC's “Hardball,” the host quipped, “His critics will probably say, 'Yeah, we knew this was coming'” (video follows with transcript and commentary): CHRIS MATTHEWS, HOST: You know, gentlemen, I’m a little bit jubilant right now, a little bit frisky so I’ll say something that will bother people. But if you have, a lot of the people in this country think the President of the United States is Muslim, which he’s not, he’s Christian. They think he’s foreign born, which he’s not, he’s American born. But they have this attitude about him, the people on the right a lot of them, right? And here he is, and he comes into office, and this jubilant situation in Eqypt, with the first time in our lives we get to see people from the Arab world in a very positive democratic setting. Not as terrorists or not as people fighting Israel, or whatever. Not mouthing epithets against the West, but people like us. DAVID CORN, MOTHER JONES: Right, celebrating. MATTHEWS: In a way it’s like it took Obama to have this happen, or it's just so serendipitous. CORN: (Laughs) Well, I mean.. MATTHEWS: His critics will probably say, “Yeah, we knew this was coming.” Not just his critics, Chris, but yours as well. Exactly what has Obama done in this region prior to the protests beginning to make this happen? Maybe more importantly, Matthews seems to be fogetting the marvelous images that we saw in Iraq in the previous decade when citizens of that nation participated in free elections for the first time in their lives proudly displaying purple ink-stained fingers. Weren't pictures like this “the Arab world in a very positive democratic setting?” How quickly shills like Matthews forget when the agenda is to help a president they adore get re-elected. One can only hope that God forbid Egypt does end up being taken over by a radical Islamic theocracy the same folks giving Obama credit now will blame him then. But don't hold your breath. It'll be George W. Bush's fault if that happens.
Continue reading …Critics say Obama didn’t lead, he followed. This was appropriate: Egypt is on a path to democracy and no one got invaded • Obama’s speech, on CNN My God, what a moving day this is . To think that just 18 days of largely peaceful protests can accomplish this. Remarkable. President Obama’s remarks on Friday afternoon were appropriate and powerful: the people of Egypt have inspired the world. For all the understandable frustration on the part of Egyptian protesters over the fact the the US wouldn’t commit to them more fully earlier, I think Obama and his people ended up playing this rather well. They turned up the heat incrementally, and but for one or two missteps, the timing was actually pretty good. Critics, neocons especially, will say he didn’t lead, he followed. That’s true. And that was appropriate. It was up to the Egyptian people to lead this, not the United States. And the Egyptian military. Someday, we’ll get the back story on how, in just 24 hours, the military went from evidently backing Mubarak to ditching him. This was crucial, and I doubt very much the US played no role in this. I’d wager that Pentagon chief Robert Gates and Mike Mullen, the heads of the joint chiefs of staff, had quite a lot to do with that. With the Egyptian army relying on US military aid basically to exist, their words surely carried weight. Maybe all that aid over years, excessive as it has been in many ways, paid important dividends in the last two weeks. The army behaved professionally, not like some tinhorn’s personal secret security service. That was one of the most breathtaking things about this, and could stand as one of the most hopeful in terms of serving as a model for future situations like this. There’s a long way to go from here, of course. This is a happy beginning, not a happy ending. But now, the US can and should start playing the less ambiguous role it took on, as of Thursday night. We need to be on the side of democracy and rights and freedoms, and stay on that side, and we do need to continue to be concerned with the positive aspects of regional stability to which Egypt has contributed. There are more needles to thread. Finally: no, I will not say that Obama deserves much credit for this. At the same time, I have no doubt in my mind that if President McCain had given a speech on democracy in Cairo 20 months ago and now this happened, the neocons and Fox News and the usual suspects would be calling it “the McCain Revolution” and baying about how it proved that a bold stance by an American president had made all the difference. I won’t parrot that kind of inanity. I’ll simply say that, from his Cairo speech until today, Obama has helped this process more than he’s hindered it. And we didn’t have to invade two countries, either. That’s the right side – for him, and for us, the people of the United States. Now, we need to stay there. This is a great opportunity for the US, and all of the west, to help a people learn the habits of freedom, and for those habits to spread. Egypt Barack Obama Obama administration United States US politics US foreign policy John McCain Republicans Protest Middle East Michael Tomasky guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US president calls for end to state of emergency and peaceful transition to democracy The Egyptian people have been told that there was a transition of authority, but it is not yet clear that this transition is immediate, meaningful or sufficient. Too many Egyptians remain unconvinced that the government is serious about a genuine transition to democracy, and it is the responsibility of the government to speak clearly to the Egyptian people and the world. The Egyptian government must put forward a credible, concrete and unequivocal path toward genuine democracy, and they have not yet seized that opportunity. As we have said from the beginning of this unrest, the future of Egypt will be determined by the Egyptian people. But the United States has also been clear that we stand for a set of core principles. We believe that the universal rights of the Egyptian people must be respected, and their aspirations must be met. We believe that this transition must immediately demonstrate irreversible political change, and a negotiated path to democracy. To that end, we believe that the emergency law should be lifted. We believe that meaningful negotiations with the broad opposition and Egyptian civil society should address the key questions confronting Egypt’s future: protecting the fundamental rights of all citizens; revising the constitution and other laws to demonstrate irreversible change, and jointly developing a clear roadmap to elections that are free and fair. We therefore urge the Egyptian government to move swiftly to explain the changes that have been made, and to spell out in clear and unambiguous language the step by step process that will lead to democracy and the representative government that the Egyptian people seek. Going forward, it will be essential that the universal rights of the Egyptian people be respected. There must be restraint by all parties. Violence must be forsaken. It is imperative that the government not respond to the aspirations of their people with repression or brutality. The voices of the Egyptian people must be heard. The Egyptian people have made it clear that there is no going back to the way things were: Egypt has changed, and its future is in the hands of the people. Those who have exercised their right to peaceful assembly represent the greatness of the Egyptian people, and are broadly representative of Egyptian society. We have seen young and old, rich and poor, Muslim and Christian join together, and earn the respect of the world through their non-violent calls for change. In that effort, young people have been at the forefront, and a new generation has emerged. They have made it clear that Egypt must reflect their hopes, fulfil their highest aspirations, and tap their boundless potential. In these difficult times, I know that the Egyptian people will persevere, and they must know that they will continue to have a friend in the United States of America. Barack Obama Egypt Hosni Mubarak Obama administration US politics US foreign policy Protest Middle East guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …US president says the Egyptian government has yet to put forward a ‘credible, concrete and unequivocal path to democracy’ after President Hosni Mubarak refuses to step down Barack Obama expressed dismay at the failure of Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak to stand down and said the Egyptian government has yet to put forward a “credible, concrete and unequivocal path to democracy”, as Egypt prepared today for what protesters predicted would be the biggest protests yet. The US president’s patience appeared to be nearing its end after being wrong-footed and embarrassed earlier in the day by an expectation that Mubarak was planning to stand down. The US unhappiness with Mubarak was echoed by European leaders. The White House, the state department and the Pentagon will be seeking explanations from their counterparts in Egypt as to what went wrong. Obama’s critics claimed he had been set up and the whole incident reflected his naivety. The Obama administration had hinted early on Thursday that Mubarak was on the eve of departure. The CIA director, Leon Panetta, giving evidence before the House intelligence committee, predicted there was a “a strong likelihood that Mubarak may step down” by Thursday night. Obama, on a trip to Michigan, shared the sense of optimism, saying the world was “witnessing history unfold”. But these hopes were dashed by Mubarak in a televised speech, leaving Obama and Panetta looking foolish. Panetta said later his comments had been based on erroneous news reports rather than CIA reports. Obama, returning from Michigan, watched Mubarak’s statement aboard Air Force One and, on landing, rushed to the White House for an unscheduled meeting with his national security advisers. He issued a statement afterwards that amounted to a rebuke, albeit mild, of Mubarak for not standing down. After a fortnight of dithering, it was the strongest statement by Obama in favour of democracy. “The Egyptian government must put forward a credible, concrete and unequivocal path toward genuine democracy, and they have not yet seized that opportunity,” Obama said, reflecting his dismay with Mubarak. He praised the protesters, aligning the US clearly behind them for the first time: “Those who have exercised their right to peaceful assembly represent the greatness of the Egyptian people, and are broadly representative of Egyptian society.” This amounted to a rejection of Mubarak’s claim that foreigners were behind the protests. Demonstrating scepticism with Mubarak’s claim to have handed over power to his vice-president Omar Suleiman, Obama said any reforms had to be “irreversible”. The Obama administration has been putting pressure on Mubarak since last week to stand down straight away, but Mubarak, in what appeared to be a direct snub to the US president, said he would not bow to international pressure. Mubarak’s response offers further evidence of the US’s slow decline from its status as superpower to a position where it is unable to decisively influence events in Egypt, in spite of that country being one of the biggest recipients of US military aid. The administration has shifted from solidly supporting Mubarak, to suggesting he should go now, only to back him at the weekend to remain in office until the autumn – a decision that secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, reversed hours later when she threw US support behind Suleiman. The foreign secretary, William Hague, issued a statement on Thursday night saying he was studying Mubarak’s statement closely. “It is not immediately clear what powers are being handed over and what the full implications are.” He called for an urgent but orderly transition to a broader government. Guido Westerwelle, the German foreign minister, said Mubarak’s speech “was not the hoped-for step forward”. Nicolas Sarkozy expressed hope that Egypt would avoid an Iranian-style revolution: “I hope with all my heart for Egypt’s nascent democracy that they take time to create the structures and principles that will help them find the path to democracy and not another form of dictatorship, religious dictatorship, as happened in Iran.” Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch, expressed disappointment: “Mubarak’s speech is far from the needed break with the abusive system of the past 30 years. The US and EU governments should use their influence and their aid to encourage real reform.” Robert Springborg, professor of national security affairs at the US Naval Postgraduate School, described Mubarak’s refusal to leave as “an enormously provocative step”. Stephen Grand, a Middle East specialist at Washington’s Brookings Institution, said the US must “use all of its leverage to get Mubarak to recognise that he needs to leave”, and cast doubt on Suleiman’s leadership. “Omar Suleiman has shown that he’s not a credible figure,” he added. Barack Obama Hosni Mubarak Egypt Obama administration US foreign policy Protest Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …By refusing to leave office the Egyptian president has exposed America’s inability to decisively influence events The Obama administration was embarrassingly wrongfooted when the Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak confounded expectations by refusing to leave office. Mubarak’s speech came just hours after Barack Obama and the director of the CIA, Leon Panetta, appeared to give credence to the rumours that the Egyptian president was heading for the exit. Obama has been putting pressure on Mubarak since last week to stand down straight away, but Mubarak, in a televised address tonight, said he would not bow to international pressure, a direct snub to the US president. Mubarak’s response provides a graphic illustration of America’s slow decline from its status as the world’s sole superpower to a position where it is unable to decisively influence events in Egypt, in spite of that country being one of the biggest recipients of US military aid. Since the uprising began, the Obama administration has shifted from solidly supporting Mubarak, to suggesting a few days later that he should go now, only to back him at the weekend to remain in office until the autumn – a decision that the US secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, reversed hours later when she threw US support behind the Egyptian vice-president, Omar Suleiman. But even support for Suleiman may leave US policy trailing behind events in Egypt, with the vice-president seen as too close to Mubarak. Obama, speaking in Michigan, sought to align the US belatedly with the demonstrators of Tahrir Square, acknowledging their role in the uprising. His words seemed to pave the way for Mubarak to go, but, as throughout the crisis, they were ambiguous enough to be open to various interpretations. The US president can now say he was only speaking generally about the Egyptian crisis. He told an audience of students: “What is absolutely clear is that we are witnessing history unfolding. It’s a moment of transformation that’s taking place because the people of Egypt are calling for change. “They’ve turned out in extraordinary numbers and all ages and all walks of life … And so going forward, we want all Egyptians to know America will continue to do everything we can to support an orderly and genuine transition to democracy in Egypt.” Barack Obama Hosni Mubarak Egypt Protest US foreign policy Obama administration US politics Middle East United States Ewen MacAskill guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Protesters react with anger in Tahrir Square as Egyptian president reaffirms he will stay in role until September
Continue reading …We knew the White House was on board with the FCC’s desire to free up an additional 500MHz worth of spectrum over the next decade from private and federal holders, as announced last year, and now Obama has announced the plan to do it. The plan is to incentivize the current spectrum squatters with a share of the revenue gained from auctioning off the spectrum — mostly for mobile broadband use — which only seems fair, and for now it seems those auctions will be voluntary. But that’s just the tip of the iceberg: the plan also includes a $5 billion investment in constructing 4G networks in rural areas (with a goal to reach at least 98 percent of Americans with the service), a $3 billion fund for 4G R&D to help the rollout, and $10.7 billion for a wireless public safety network . The beauty of this plan is that all these proposed costs are offset by the spectrum auction, which is estimated to raise $27.8 billion, of which $9.6 billion will be dedicated to deficit reduction. Oh, and the best news? The government has already found 115MHz worth of Federal spectrum that it can free up by using its other spectrum more efficiently, and has another 95MHz worth in its sights. Hit up the source link to see President Obama’s speech on the subject, which has just begun, or check it out embedded after the break. Continue reading Obama announces plan to free up 500MHz of spectrum, invest in 4G for rural areas, and build out nationwide public safety network Obama announces plan to free up 500MHz of spectrum, invest in 4G for rural areas, and build out nationwide public safety network originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 10 Feb 2011 13:38:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds . Permalink
Continue reading …MSNBC's Lawrence O'Donnell on Wednesday had a very heated discussion with Congressman Steve King (R-Ia.) about Barack Obama's religious upbringing. At one point, the “Last Word” host actually asked his guest, “How do we know you are not a Muslim?” (video follows with transcript and commentary): LAWRENCE O’DONNELL, HOST: Congressman, I just want to go back to the tape we just showed. I am not sure you had good enough audio to hear every word of it, but you lived it. You were in a constituents meeting, and one of your constituents said, you know, he doesn't have American experience. You said, he, this is what you said about the President of the United States. “He doesn't have an American experience. He does not have an American experience,” and the constituent then said to you, “He didn't grow up in America.” Congressman, where did Barack Obama grow up? REPRESENTATIVE STEVE KING (R-IOWA): Well, by his own reports, he spent a lot of his early formative years in Indonesia. O’DONNELL: How many? Congressman, how many years? KING: I would guest five or six years in Indonesia, perhaps longer. O’DONNELL: Then where did he live? KING: Pardon me? O’DONNELL: Then where did he live? KING: Then he moved to Hawaii, which is in America, which is going to be your next point. O’DONNELL: Okay, so my question to you is you know more than your constituents about a lot of things, an awful lot of things, and you know more than your constituents about Barack Obama. Why didn't you say he grew up in Hawaii? Why couldn't you bring yourself to say that in Iowa? KING: Well, it would have been a contradiction of the facts. He has, really, very formative years, from age about five on to nine or ten. O’DONNELL: Did he grew up in Hawaii, Congressman? Are you denying that he grew up in Hawaii? KING: Part of his upbringing was Hawaii, it certainly was. It certainly was. I don't think there's any question, part of his upbringing was in Hawaii. O’DONNELL: Now, do you have any doubt whether he is a Christian? KING: You know, I think that is up to the President, but I will tell you that I would not, I would not present him as anything other than that. It’s his religion. That's what he said. In fact, when he gave a speech in Cairo last year… O’DONNELL: Do you believe he’s a Christian? Do you believe he’s a Christian, Congressman? KING: …he said he was a Christian. I take him at his word. O’DONNELL: Are you a Christian? KING: Yes, sir. O’DONNELL: Should I take you at your word or should I maybe suspect you're a Muslim? Do you have a Christian ID you can show me and prove to me you're a Christian? KING: I think God’s going to ask you not to judge as I am not judging President Obama’s religion O’DONNELL: Do you have a Christian ID? KING: No one has a Christian ID. O’DONNELL: Catholics get birth certificates, get baptismal certificates in fact. There are some religions that do issue certificates of certain kinds. Do you have any? This should give readers an idea that O'Donnell wasn't even listening to King's answers, for if he had been, the discussion would have been over: KING: I don't think I do. I’ve got a certificate of baptism, so that would be a start. So, O'Donnell said, “Catholics get birth certificates, get baptismal certificates,” and King replied, “I’ve got a certificate of baptism.” But that wasn't good enough for O'Donnell: O’DONNELL: How do we know, how do we know you are not a Muslim? Well, he just told the host he had a certificate of baptism which the host previously said was proof of one's religion. As you can see, there was no answer King could have given that would have satisfied his interrogator. Despite this, the folks at MSNBC must have been proud of O'Donnell's behavior for the video of this entire segment was posted at “The Last Word Blog” with the headline “Is Rep. Steve King a Muslim?” I kid you not: And this is what the folks at MSNBC consider journalism. Here's the video of the entire segment if you can stand it:
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